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Home/ Questions/Q 1071003
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T20:39:03+00:00 2026-05-16T20:39:03+00:00

I read this in Java language Spec 17.1: Each object in Java is associated

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I read this in Java language Spec 17.1:

“Each object in Java is associated
with a monitor, which a thread can
lock or unlock.”

Why necessarily? Doesn’t that make java object too heavy weight? I’ve no idea why a Object like, say, a string, should be naturally a monitor!

EDIT:

I think it over and yes, Java has a keyword synchronized, because EVERY object could have a synchronized method, so it’s necessary to associate EVERY object a Monitor.

But still this seems not a very good solution, usually you need more that one mutex for one class, except for that pojo classes that’s really very simple.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T20:39:03+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 8:39 pm

    Your fundamental problem is in assuming that every object has some sort of Monitor built into it, waiting for it to be used by some code. In reality, most objects are never used as a monitor, so the monitors don’t have to be created until they are used. Rather than implementing this feature as every object having a private Monitor monitor field, think of it as being implemented as the JVM having a global HashMap<object, Monitor> monitors.

    A possible implementation is this: Whenever a synchronized block is entered, the JVM looks up the synchronized object in the map (monitors). If it finds it, it gets the monitor to use. If it doesn’t find it, it enters a critical section dedicated to the map. It then looks up the object again because another thread may have created it between the previous check and entering the critical section. If it’s still not there, it creates the monitor for the synchronized object and leaves the critical section.

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